1 / 21

Non-exporting modes of entry

Non-exporting modes of entry. Three main non-exporting modes of entry Licensing (including franchising) Strategic Alliances Wholly owned manufacturing subsidiaries. Three modes of entry. LICENSING. Host Country. Blueprint : “how to do it”. Home country. Host Country. Host County.

zora
Download Presentation

Non-exporting modes of entry

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Non-exporting modes of entry • Three main non-exporting modes of entry • Licensing (including franchising) • Strategic Alliances • Wholly owned manufacturing subsidiaries

  2. Three modes of entry LICENSING Host Country Blueprint : “how to do it” Home country Host Country Host County WHOLLY-OWNED SUBSIDIARY STRATEGIC ALLIANCE (J.V.) A replica of home A “joint effort”

  3. The Impact of Entry Barriers • The non-exporting modes of entry basically represent alternatives for the firm when entry barriers to a foreign market are high. • These entry barriers involve not only artificial barriers such as tariffs, but also involve lack of knowledge of the foreign market and a need to outsource the marketing to local firms with greater understanding of the market.

  4. Licensing • LICENSING refers to offering a firm’s know-how or other intangible asset to a foreign company for a fee, royalty, and/or other type of payment • Advantages for the new exporter • The need for local market research is reduced • The licensee may support the product strongly in the new market • Disadvantages • Can lose control over the core competitive advantage of the firm. • The licensee can become a new competitor to the firm.

  5. Franchising • A form of licensing where the franchisee in a local market pays a royalty on revenues - and sometimes an initial fee - to the franchisor who controls the business and owns the brand. • The local franchisee typically invests money in the local operation and has the right to operate under the franchisor’s brand name. • The franchisee gets help setting up the operation, usually according to a well-developed blueprint. The business is typically very standardized (fast food operations is a case in point).

  6. Franchising Pros and Cons • Advantages • The basic “product” sold is a well-recognized brand name. • The franchisor provides various market support services to the franchisee • The local franchisee raises the necessary capital and manages the franchise • A disadvantage • Careful and continuous quality control is necessary to maintain the integrity of the brand name.

  7. Licensing • Original Equipment Manufacturing (OEM) • A company enters a foreign market by selling its unbranded product or component to another company in the market country • Examples: • Canon provides cartridges for Hewlett-Packard’s laser printers • Samsung sells unbranded television sets , microwaves, and VCRs to resellers such as Sears, Amana, and Emerson in the U.S.

  8. Strategic Alliances • Strategic Alliances (SAs) • Typically a collaborative arrangement between firms, sometimes competitors, across borders • Based on sharing of vital information, assets, and technology between the partners • Have the effect of weakening the tie between potential ownership advantages and company control

  9. Equity and Non-Equity SAs Equity Strategic Alliances – Joint Ventures Non-equity Strategic Alliances: – Distribution Alliances – Manufacturing Alliances – Research and Development Alliances

  10. Equity Alliances: Joint Ventures • Joint Ventures • Involve the transfer of capital, manpower, and usually some technology from the foreign partner to an existing local firm. • Examples include Rank-Xerox, 3M-Sumitomo, several China entries where a government-controlled company is the partner. • This was the typical arrangement in past alliances – the equity investment allowed both partners to share both risks and rewards. • Today non-equity alliances are common.

  11. Rationale for Non-Equity Alliances • Tangible economic gains at lower risk • Access to technology • Markets are reached without a long buildup of relationships in channels • Efficient manufacturing made possible without investment in a new plant • SA’s allow two companies to undertake missions impossible for one individual firm to undertake. • Strategic Alliances constitute an efficient economic response to changed conditions.

  12. Distribution Alliances • Also called “piggybacking”, “consortium marketing” • Examples • SAS, KLM, Austrian Air, and Swiss Air • STAR Alliance (United Airlines, Lufthansa, Air Canada, SAS, Thai Airways, and Varig Brazilian Airlines) • Chrysler and Mitsubishi Motors

  13. Advantages Improved capacity load Wider product line Inexpensive access to a market Quick access to a market Assets are complimentary Each partner can concentrate on what they do best Disadvantages Time arrangement can limit growth for the partners Can hinder learning more about the market, creating obstacles to further inroads Pros and Cons of Distribution Alliances

  14. Manufacturing Alliances • Shared manufacturing examples • Volvo and Renault share body parts and components • Saab engines made by GM Europe • Advantages • Convenient • Money saving • Disadvantages • The organization must deal with two principals in charge of production, harder to communicate customer feedback • Can put constraints on future growth

  15. R&D Alliances • R&D Alliances • Provide favorable economics, speed of access, and managerial resources and are intended to solve critical survival questions for the firm • Used to be seen as particularly risky, since technological know-how is often the key competitive advantage of a global firm • The risk of dissipation has become less of a concern, however, as technology diffusion is growing ever faster anyway.

  16. Manufacturing Subsidiaries • Wholly Owned Manufacturing Subsidiaries • Undertaken by the international firm for several reasons • To acquire raw materials • To operate at lower manufacturing costs • To avoid tariff barriers • To satisfy local content requirements

  17. Manufacturing Subsidiaries ADVANTAGES DISADVANTAGES • Local production lessens transport/import-related costs, taxes & fees • Availability of goods can be guaranteed, delays may be eliminated • More uniform quality of product or service • Local production says that the firm is willing to adapt products & services to the local customer requirements • Higher risk exposure • Heavier pre-decision information gathering & research evaluation • Political risk • “Country-of-origin” effects can be lost by manufacturing elsewhere.

  18. FDI: Acquisitions • Instead of a “greenfield” investment, the company can enter by acquiring an existing local company. • Advantages • Speed of penetration • Quick market penetration of the company’s products • Disadvantages • Existing product line and new products to be introduced might not be compatible • Can be looked at unfavorably by the government, employees, or others • Necessary re-education of the sales force and distribution channels

  19. Entry Modes and Local Marketing Control • The local marketing can be controlled to varying degrees, quite independent of the entry mode chosen. The typical global firm maintains a sales subsidiary to manage the local marketing. Examples:

  20. Optimal Entry Mode Matrix Product/Market Situation

  21. Illustrative Entry Strategies Product/Market Situation

More Related